————— A AAA RO A A OA A SAB 135. I. 08 MLMMGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. Subject: “ Echoes." | TEXT: “The sounding agafn of the mount: Qing" Ezekiel vil, 7. At last 1 have it. The Bible has in it a recognition of all phrases of the natural world from the aurora of the midnight heavens to the phosphorescence of the tum- bling sea. But the well known sound that we call the Echo I found not until a few days ago I discovered it in my text, *‘The sounding again of the mountains.” That is the Echo. Ezekiel of the text heard it again and again. Born among mountains, and in his jour- ney to distant exile, he had passad amon mountains, and it was natural that al through his writings there should loom wu the mountains. Among them he had hea the sound of cataracts and of tempests in wrestle with oak and cedar, and the voices of wild beast, but a man of so poetic a na- ture as Ezekiel could not aliow another sound, viz, the Echo, to be disregarded, and so he gives us in our text “I'he sound- ing again of the mountains.” a nymph, the daughter of Earth and Air, following Narcissus through forests and into grotioes and every whither, and so strange wonder that the superstitious have lifted it into the supernatural. Youand I in boy- hood or girthood experimented with this re- sponsiveness of sound. Standing half way between the house and barn, we shouted many times to hear the reverberations, or out among the mountains back of our home, on some long tramp, we stopped and made what Ezekiel calls *‘ fhe sounding again of the mountains.” The Eeho bas frightenel many a child and many a man, have spoken to hear the same words repeated by the invisible, with voices ready to answer, Vet it would not be so starcling if they said something else, but why do those lips of the air say just what you say? mean to please?! Who are you and where are you, thou wondrous Echo? its response is a reiteration, The shot of a gun, the clapping of the hands, the beating of a drum, the voice of a violin are some- times repeated many times by the Echo. Near Coblentz —that which seventeen Echoes. In 1776, a that near Milan, Italy, there were seventy such reflections of sound to» one snap of a pistol. Play a bugle near a lake of Killar- ney and the tune is played back to you as distinctly as when you played it. There is a well two hundred and ten feet deep at Carisbrooke castle, in the Isle of Wight. Drop a pin into that well and the sound of its fall comes to the top of the well distinot- Is. Ablastof an Alpine horn comes Lack surge of reflected sound, until it seems as if every peak had lifted and blown an Alpine horn, But have you noticed—and this is the rea- in the natural world has its analogy in the moral and religious world? Have you noticed the tremendous fact that what we say and do comes back in recoiled gladness or dis- aster? About this resonance I preach this sermon, First—Parental teachinz and example bave their Echo in the character of descend- ants. Exceptions! Ob, yes. Bo in the natural world there may be no Echo, or a distorted Echo, by reason of peculiar prox- imities, but the general rule is that the char. acter of the children is the Echo of the char- acter of the parents, The general ruie is that good parents have good children and bad parents have bad children. If the old Ian is a crank, his son is apt to be a crank and the grandchild a crank. Toe tendency Js $0 mighty in that direction that it will get worse and worse unless some hero or heroine in that line shall rise and say: “Here! By the help of God, I will stand this no longer. Against this hereditary tendency to queer- ness I protest.” And be or she will set up an altar and a magnificent lite that will reverse things, and there will be no more cranks among that kindref, In another family the father and mother are consecrated people. What they do is right. What they teach isright. The boys may for some tiie be wild and the daugh- ter worldly, but watch! Years pass on, per haps ten years, twenty years, and you go back to the church where the father and mother used to be consistent membars, You have heard nothing about the family church you see the sexton ani you ask him, “Where is old Mr. Webster? “Uh, he bas been dea | many years!” “Where is Mrs Webster?” *Ob, she died fifteen years ago™ “I suppose their son Jo2 went to the dogs? “Ub, no,” says the sexton, “‘he is up thers in the elders’ seat. He is one of our best and most important members. You ought to hear him prav and sing. He is not Jos any longer, he is Eloer Webster.” “Well, wiiere is the daughter Mary? I suppose she is the same thoughtiess butterfly she used to de? Oh, no,” says the sex ton, *vhe is the president of our missionary society and the directress in the orphan asylum, and when she goes down tbe street all the ragamuffios take nol 1 of her dress and cry, ‘Auntie, when are you going to bring us some more books and shoes and things* And when, in times of revival, there is some bard case back in a church ew that no one else can touch, she goes where e is, and in one minute she has a-crying, and the first thing we know she fs of God! And if nobody seems ready to pray, she kneels down in the aisle beside him and says, ‘O Lord! with apathos and a power and a triumph that seem instavtiy to emancipate the hardened sinner. Oh, no! ou must not call ber a thoughtless butter- y in our presence. You see we would not stand it.” The fact is that the son and snug of that family did not promise much at the start, but they are now an Echo, a glorious Echo, a prolonged Echo of tal teaching and example. A Vermont mother, as her boy was about tostart for a life on the sea, mid: “Ed. ward, I have never seen the ocean, but [ un. derstand the great temptation is strong drink. Fromiss me you will never touch it.” Many years after that, telling of this in a meeting, Edward said: “I glass of liquor in all Do that my mother’s form did not a ore me, and I do not know how liquor tastes. | never have tasted it and all Le cause of the This was result of that conversation at the gate of the Vermont farmhouse, The statuary of Thorwaldsen was semt from , and the straw in woich pacied was thrown upon the ground. The next spring beaut ful Italian flowers ng up w this straw had been cast, in it had been som» of the seeds of Italian flowers, and, whether neighborhood where that family used to live. You meet on the street or on the road an old inhabitant of that neighborhood, and you say. ‘‘Can you tell me anything about the Petersons who used to live here?’ Yee” says the old inhabitant; “I remember them very well, The father and mother have been dead for vears” “Well, how about the children? hat has become of them?’ fhe old inhabitant replies: ‘Chey turned out badly, You know the old man was about half an infidel and the boys were all infidels, The oldest son married, but i into drinking habits, and in a few years his wife was not able to live with him any long- er, aud his children were taken by relatives, and he died of delirium tremens on Black. weil's Island, His other son forged the name of his employer and fled to Canada, “One of the daughters of the old folks married an inebriate with the idea of reform. ing him, and you know how that always ends~—in the ruin of both the experimenter and the one experimented with, Tha other daughter disappeared mysteriously and has not been heard of. There was a young | woman picked out of the East River and put in the morgue, and some thought it was her, but [ cannot say.” ‘Is it possible? you ery out. “Yes itis possible. Tho family is a complete wreck.” My hearers, that is just what might have been expected. All this is only the Echo, the dismal Echo, the awful Echo, the dreadful Echo of ntal obliquity | and unfaithfuiness. The old folks heaps 1 up | a mountain of wrong influences, and this is only what my text calls ‘‘Che sounding of { the mountains.” Indeed our entire behavior in this world will have a resound, While opportunities fly in a straight line and just touch us once and are gone never to return, the wrongs we practice upon others fly in a circle, and they come back to the place from when they started. Doctor Guillotine thought it | smart to introduce the instrument of death named after him, but did not like it so } RO Sn SAH AO come, Ob, God! by Thy converting and sanctifying spirit make us right here and now that we may be right forever! “Well,” says some one, “this idea of moral, spiritual and eternal Echo js new to me, Is there not some way of stopping this Echo My answer in, ‘God canand He only.” 1f i isa chearful Echo we do not want it stoppeds if a baleful Echo we would like to have it stopped. do i to stop an Echo, Many an oration has been spoiled and many an orator confoundsd by an Echo, theatres and music halls have been ruinsd by an Echo. Arcaitects have strung wires across auditoriums to arrest the Echo, and hunz upholstery against the walls, hoping to entrap it, ant hundrels of thousands of dollars have been expanded in public build- ings of this country to keep the air from answering when it ought to be quiet, Aristotle and Pythagoras and Isaac New- ton and La Place and our own Joseph Henry tried to hunt down the Echo, but still the unexplored realms of acoustics are larger than the explore!, When our first Brook- lyn Tabernacle was being constructed, we were told by architects that it was of such a shape that the human voice could not bo heard in it, or, if heard, it would be jangled into Echoes. In state of worriment [ went to Joseph Henry, the president of Bmithsonian Insti. tution at Washington, and told him of this evil propheoy.and he replied: “I have proba. bly experimented mor: with the laws of sound than any other man, andl have got as far as this, Two buildings may seem to be exactly alike and yet in one the acoustics may be good ani in the other bad, Goon witn your church building and trust that all will be well." Oh, this mighty law of sound! Oh, this subtle Echo! Theres is only one be. it— ‘I'he mountains,” And if it isso bard to destroy a natural sounding again of the well when his own head was chopped off i with the guillotine, So also the Judgment Day will be an Ech» of all our other days. The universe needs such a day, for there are to many things in | ! the world that need to be fixed up and ex- plained. If God had not appointed such a { day all the pations would crv out, “Ob, God, give usa Judgment Day.” Butweare { apt to think of it ani speak about it as a { day away off in the future, haviag no spe | ®ial connection with this day or any other day, Tae fact is that we are now makiog un its voices; its trumpets will only sound back again tous what we vow say and do. That is the meaning of all that Scripture ! | which says that Christ will on that day ad | dress the soul, saying, “Il wasnaked and Ye | clothed me; | was sick and in prison and Yeo visited me." All the footsteps in that prison corridor as | the Christiaa reformer walks too the wicket of the incarcerated, yes all the whispers of condolence in the ear of that poor soul dying | { in that garret, yea all the kindnesses ars be | ing caught up and rolled on until they dash against the judgment throne and then they will be struck back into the ears of thes: | sons and daughters ol mercy. Louder than the crash of Mount Washington falling on its face in the world wide catastrophe, and the boiling of the sea over the furnaces of | universal conflagration will be the Echo and | re-echo of the goo i deeds done and the sym- | pathetic words uttered and the mighly bene iactions wrought. Un that day all the charities, all the self. sacrificies, ail the philanthropies, ail the beneficent last wills and testaments, nll the Christian work of all the ages, will Le piled up into mountains, and thoss who have served God and served the suffering human race will hear what my text styles “Toe sounding of the mountains. ™ i My subject advances to tell you that eternity itself is only an echo of time. Mind you, the analogy warrants my saying thie | The echo is not always exactly in kind lke the sound originally projected, Lord Ha. leigh says that a woman's voice sounding from a grove was returned an octave higher, A scientist playing a flute in Fairfax County, Va. found that all the notes were returned, although somes of them in a raised pitch | A trumpet sounded ten times near Glas. gow, Reotland, and the ten notes were all repeated, bat a third lower. And the spir. ftual law corresponds with the natural! worid. What we do of good or bad may not come back to us in jast the proportion we expect it, but come back it will; it may be frow a higher gladness than we thought or fron a deeper woo, froa a mightier ocon- queror or from a worse captive, fron a tbigher throne or deeper dungeon. Our prayer or our bLiasphemy, our Kindness or our cruelty, our faith or our unbelief, our holy lite or our dissolute behavior, will come back somehow, Suppose the bows of a factory or the head of a commercial firm some day comes out among bis clerics or employes, and putting fiis thumbs in the ar nioles of bis vest says, with an air of swagger and Jocosity: "Well, I dou't believe in the Bibie or the church. | fae ons is an imposition and the other is | full of hypocrites. I declare I would not trust ons of those very pious people farther than I could see him.” That is ail he says, but be has said suou gh, The youns mm go Lack to their counters or their shuttles ani say within themselves, “Wel, he fsa sus ceselul man and bas probably stu lied up the whole subject anl is promabiy rigat” That ons lying utterance against Bibles and churches has put five youazr men oa the | wrong track, and though the influential man | bad spoken oaly in hall jest, the echo shall come back to him in five ruined lifetimes and five destroyed eternities. You see ths | | Echoes are an octave lower than he antici- | patad, On the other hand, some rainy day, | when thers are hardly any customers, the | | Christian merchant comes out from his | | counting room and stands among the young | men who have nothing to co, and says: “Well, boys, this is a dall day, but it will felear off alter awhile. There are a good | many ups and downs in basiness, but there | | is an overruling Providence. “Years ago | made up my mind to trust | { God and Hs has always seen me through. | | remember when [ was yourage, [ hal just | come to town and the temptations of cit | life therad around me, but I resisted. ! The fact is there were two old folks out on | the old farm praying for me and I knew it, | | and somehow [ could not do as some of tae {clerks did or go where some of the clerks | went, I tell you, boys, it is best always to { do right, and there is nothing to keep one | right like the old fashioned religion of Jesus { Christ. John, where did you go to church | last Bunday? Henry, how is the Young | Men's C ristian association prospering?’ f About moon the rain ceases and the sun | comes out and the clerks zo to their places, | and thoy say within themssives: “Well, he is a successful merchant and I guess he knows what he is talking aboat, and the Uhlristian religion must be a good thing. God knows [want some help in this bat with temptation and sin.” The successful merchant who uttered the kind words did not know how much he was doing, but the echio will come back in five lifetimes of | Yirtus. and usefulness, and fivas Christian deathbade and five heavens. From all the | mountains of fapturs and atl the mountaing of glory and ali the mountains of eternity, he will catch what Ezokiel in my text styles ‘I'he sounding azain of the mouatains” Yen, I take a step further in this subject and say that our own eternity will bea re. verperation of our own earthly listime. What we are here we will be thore, only on & larger scale. Dissolution will tear down the body and embank it, but our faculties of mind and soul will go right on without the pm Bp Donat a) + ol on) ta n tion. Thers will be no more difference than between a lion behind the iroa bars and a lion escaped into the fleld, between an eagle ina cage and an in She sky. Good here, there; hore, thers, i" fon bLodwarfed eternity. Eternity is only an enlarged time, In this life our soul is in dry dock. The moment ws leave this life we are launched for our front NoTags. and wa poh for con turies quintillion, but does not itn structure after it , change outof the dry dock, it does not iS or from schooner to Echo, how much harder to stop a moral You know that the Echoes are affected by the surfaces, and the shape of rocks, and the dopth of ravines, and the relative posi. tion of buildings® And once in heaven of the everiasting charms of heaven will be the rolling, bursting, ascending, desending, All the songs we ever upon us in Echo, The scientists tell us that in this world the roar of artillery and the boom of the thunder are so loud, because they are a combination the re- sonance, And never will we understand the full power and music of an Ecuo until with supernatural faculties able to endure then we hear all the conjoined sounds of heavenly Echoes—harps and trumpets, oratorios, bhosanoaas and hallelu jabs, enst side of heaven auswering to the west side, north side to soath side, and all the heights, and all the depths, and ali the immensities, and all the etoraities jon ing in Eeto upom Echo, Ewo in the wake of Feoho, in the future state, whether of rastare or ruin, we will listen for reverberations of Voltaire stand. ing amid the shadows will listen, and from the millions whose godlessasss and libertin- iam and debauchery wore a consequence of his brilliant blasphemies will come back a weeping, walline, desparing, agonizing, militva-voiced Echo Paul will while standing in the light, listen, and from ail tha circies of the ransomed, ani from all the many mansions, whom he heipad to people, and from all the throues he helped to ooen- pants, and from all the gates helipad 3) ples he beipal fill with worshipers there shall come back to him a glorious, ever ac cunuiating, transporting and triumphant Echo Oh, what will the tyrants and oppressors of the earth do with the Echoes? Those who are responsible for the wars of the world will bave come back to them all the groans, the of a nation's homes — Hobsnlinden and Sais- mancs, Wagram and Sedan, Marathon and Thermopyie, Buoker Hill and lexington, South Mountains and Gettysburg. Senos ascherib lstonn ! Semiramis Heten ! Mare Antony listen! Artaxaresss listen! Darius listen! Julius Cessr listen! Alexander and Napoweon listen! But to the rigateous wiil come back tae blissful Foaoes Composers of Gospel bymas and singers will listen for the return of Aostiooh and Brattie Street, Ariel and Dandee, Harwell and Wooistock, Mount Plagzan and Corona. tion, Homeward Bound and Shining Shor, and all the malolies they ever started, Bishop Heber and Charles Wesley and lsaao Watts and Thomas Hastings an | Bradbury and Horatius Bonar anl Fra rox Havergal But you know as well as I do that thers are some places whasre the reveroerations scom to meet, and standing there they rash all ai oncs And at ths point raverborations mest thay capture your ear. where all heavenly thay shall come back in an Echo in which rain zie the acclaim of a redeamed world, and the “Jubllats Deo” of a full heaven. Echo cherubic, archangeiic! Echo of thrones! Echo of Ince! Echo of tem- ples! Omnipotent Echo! Everlasting Echo! Amen! The Drojky. The one-horse drojky of Russia is meant to hold two persons. Our experi- ence was that it beid oneanda bit. It isa to sen waist of his fair companion in one of these conveyances. ‘‘His arm gets in the way 80,” he explains, ‘‘and this is the only means of disposing of it that he can The horses are first-rate, small 1a size, but able to do a great deal of hard work, and keep their good looks in spite of it. Nearly all of them are stallions, and are bred in Russia. The driver, whn is sometimes = mere boy, wears a dark-blue dressing-gown kind of coat, a curiously.shaped hat, aod high- topped boots, and makes quite a pictur. esque object. His dress scems to bea very hot one for summer, but the aver- age driver is too poor to buy cooler cloth. ing. It is astonishing to see what an amount of heat Russians seem capable of bearing. Even on the hot days of August a great mang of the officers would wear their thick military cloaks, There are no hxed fares for the drojky. Every time you hire one a long courses of bargaining ensues between you and the driver, until at length the latter consents to take about half what he first asked. Twelve cents will take you a long way, and on one occasion I got a drive for four cents. In the absence of ao fare the driver charges what he likes. Once we paid $1 for a drive of afew hundred yards in a two-horsed carriage. Temple Bar, The majority of the Beottish Gipsies have spread over a vast tract. of eoupiny, Here they have gradually become lost to view as a distinctive mace. In Europe they are found in the grunteat number to. day in Hungary Wallachia, where there are 520,000, a The pay of Chinese soldiers during man-ol-war, What are ods peace is so small that many have to as day laborers, ape The Handy Man. Mrs. Gabb-— Dear me! There comes my husband. There won't be a whole plece of furniture left in the house by midnight. Mrs. Gadd — Horrors! Does he drink, and i= that a case of liquors he Mm. Gabb—No, he doesn't drink. 1x of tools. - III cs. All That is Needed, In onr physica needs we want ths best of mended. My. T. J. Murphy, 61 Debevolos pl, “Havinz been aMict. ed with sciatle rheumatism for some time past Miss Clara “1 bruised my Hmb, and it been ne great'y swollen and «tiff, I used two bottles of a patent linfment which A physician was called who ordered the limb to be poulticed, and he gave me medicine Intorpally, without benefit, I then got a bottle of 8, Jacobs Oil, wuich It acted lke magle.— Mr. Lorenzo Buck, Bancroft, Sklawames Co. Mich., says; “1 had chronic rheumatinm for years, con. tracted during the war, Afteritting or iying down, at tirues, | coul! not get up, from stin- At work my strength would give out, then I would pass through a sickners I Lad to walk with a cane Aud sansntone time so Hl | coud not lie without terribe puns In back and I tried St, Jacobs Ol: next missrng og < dn y the Fa vite sown mbes, i'ma new man and walk without a « Mr. A. H. Cunningham, Verryvopolis, County, a writes: “My wile nfilicted wiih lame back for several YeRTs, 1 i but eX pers 1, Jacobs 0: Was er cure aad bd not Keep Was sOre y ents, 1 cau confident ity » enderiul «Toots 3 bs pti t ¥ Bouse Wilhiout iL. s iim Ww Present fashic ercated for * won. ms appear to have been or "be jor atta “hea i i + nue lookin an't be Cured unnot reach oF of Catarrh ( applications, as they thie sent of the d stitute With loeal os Catarrhi isa b AG 0 order 10 « : ¥ plernal remedies, Hal's Catarrh and acts direction Ln + GimCase, fotake ire is taken internally wi and GUS murisces. Hails Ua yQqueck medicine It mas pre t physicians In this THIRTY PTescT $10 IL HOBICS Know purifiers, acile surface ihe pert WO Inge fi L wonderful resqais unng catarrh Or esl imon ins ree, F.J Cuxxey & Do, Props Bold by uruggists, price ho. Lave thie Im fo ! } ad is om po«od of the with the best on the muosy sation of the Hrs, ar bs dosad ienis is w n prodn es Send . Toledo, O In Fonthern Europe 38 000 ngs have been pleked from one tree. Sndden Changes of Wenther cause Throat Diseases There Is no more eflecy ren Burows's iy Bn nl ghe, Colds, ote. than TeocHEs Mold oily tor Con INOCIIAL Only sm Dues s Price 25 ets, rth of Irelnnd il in th Tie snow. inl ¢ that trafic has heavy LN been so been reat) » impeded Hitter CHUTE Ma. Venn Diyvpeetming, BAGG Gsrhie on: ie ity. 4 1Hgeai ones Lhe wo? LE fhe ferp Mothers, weak women and eli dren. Firength, aus Clea eo appel bowt t are rela There six schools ia Irish is taught FITS stopped {res he De. Kren’ Nenve Rexrone No fits after tise, Marvelous res, Ire bottie free. Dr. Kline, 831 Areh IRTAT fire day's sling 8 i 521ris *, “i Paiia, Pa The Braganza diamond, the | world, weighs 185 reeset in he Cirnls THE CRIP Bo many remedios are advertieed to eure the Grip hat people smile and shake thelr heads How we Ga not claim Hood's Sarwaparilia to be a eure for this really dangerous ovmnplaint. If rou have the Grip the best thing you ean inte phys But we 4 relation to © 0 sto oalla re clan cialis that fur tw emi itions In we Grip, Hood's Sarsaparilia = a very valuable modi ine, ist, as a Preventive Hood's Sereapariila so purifies the tlond and bulids up the strength that the evsiesn snccesel ally resists sftacka of he Grip This compaint and other d enw are often preceded by aw ewe, that tiesd feeding, which Hood's Rarmaps taken In saan wu wom overtone, and seriots loess Lag tisus jure 2d, After the Crip Convalescenoe from any form of the Grip sow, and to regain (he desired drength 5 © Is absolutely necessary vented in very wai iwnie Words are bot strong enough 0 express our confidence In Hood’s Sarsaparilla 8% a tonic after attacks of the Grip, or after typhoid fever, soariet fever, diphtheria, poenmonia or other prostrating diseases. Many testimonials from peo ple who have taken it conclusively prove that it possesses Just the balid ing up effect so mur needed Hovitalises and enriches the thin and impoverished blood, and It invigorates the Hyver and kidneys Hood's Plies act easily, yet promptly and efficient iy ou the liver and bowels, ctires headache There is nothing that may not happen to a thin baby, There is nothing that may not happen to a man who is losing his healthy weight. We say they are * poor.” They are poorer than we at first suspect. Do you want almost all that is known of the value of plumpness told in a way to commend to you CAREFUL LIV. iNG—and Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil if you need it. A book on it free. Scorr & Bowser, Chemists South NTA 2, isin, 1g sth Averiue, Your druggist keeps Scon’s Emulsion of cod diver Hhwall dr.guists svoryohers go. ga, ROM THE “PACIFIC JOURNAL. A wromt nven a Tut’ Hair D The Most Pleasant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches, and fevers is to use the liguld laxafive rem edy, Byrup of Figs, whenever the system needs a gentile, yet effective cleansing. To be benefl od one must get the true remedy manufactured by the California Pig By rap Co. only. For sale by al. druggists in We, and $1 bottles, It is said that four-ifihs of all the hail- T.W,. Wood & Bons’ New Seed Catalogue for 1842 Is pronounced the most instructive and useful work o: ite kind published. It not only gives full cultural directions and de- scriptions of sll Garden sod Farm seeds, but Gardevser to decide profitable to | (See nds | able the rarmer and which are the best snd most grow. M fled free on application, vertisoment in another column.) A FRESH stream of Java is issuing from the Lase of the great cone of Mount Vesuvius, Save Your Meat From Skippers, Peerless Faper Ment Backs are guaranteed todo it. Three sizes: 8, 4 and bh cents apiece, Circulars free, All retailers should seli them, Great Southern Co. Frederick, Md, The Shah a tobaceo of Persia has pipe MAvania cured and eradicated from the gvstem by Brown's lro Bitters, which +n- COPYRIGHT 199 The wrong way, with Catarrh, is to stop it without curing it. The poisonous, irrita- ting snuffs, strong caustic solutions, “creams,” balms and the like may, perhaps, palliate for a time. Bug they may drive the disease to the lungs. The wrong way is full of danger. The right way is a proved one. riches the biood, tones the nerves, nids diges- tion, Acts like a charm on persons in general A Birmingham (England) man collected 540,000 pennies daring his lifetime, Dit BwAN'S PASTILES Cure female weaknesses; bis T- Table s cure curonic constipation, Sain. ples free. Dr. Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis, The human heart, in a Jifetime of vena s, beats 300,000,000 times, eighty perouan's Pitas iy 2) cents a D9% They are proverbually knows throughout the word 10 ve Tuurih a guineas 8 Dox. cost 0 There are over 9000 brass Laods the Salvation Ariny. in ITsMlictedwithi sore syesrtse Drisaac Thomr. son'sEyeWetsr.Drngeintase'] 12% per bottle t miler of streets, - i terlin, Germany, hax 21 It’s with Dr. Bage’s Catarrh Rem- It cures, perfectly and per- its mild, soothing, | cleansing and bealing properties, the worst cases of Chronic Catarrh. It has proved itself right, thou. sands times, when everything else has failed. - And this makes its proprietors willing to prove that it’s the right thing for you, no matter how bad case or of how long sta~ling. If they can’t they'll pay you They mean it. They're certain of their medis cine. O “ “i your cure your Catarrh, £500 in cash. My little girl suffered for three years fro fall and dislocation. The Abscess was larg Wiener, Slatington, Pa. Trouble, which at first resembled heat, but 5 One of ¢ other two, and they soon pot well. cure was wonderful — J. DD, Rains, Marrhor N. 5. 5. has no equal for Children. pature in developing the child's health, large. 1: to 1 “German Syrup’ “* I have been a great from Asth- 2 GS ny Asthma. sufferer ind severe Co Winter, Fall s as well because of my feel every 3 iy « #3 inena + any of the my lungs, was at hand When nearly worn out for want of sleep and rest, a friend recommend- i me to try thy valuable medicine, : Joschee's German Syrup. I am con- fident it saved my life. dose gave me great relief and a gentle re- sleep, such as had not had My cough began immedi Ciose ef Gentle, i Refreshing } Sleep. freshing for weeks [ found myself rapidly gaining health and weight to inform thee—unsolicited—that I am in excellent health and do ce: tainly attribute it to thy Boschee': German Syrup. C. B. STICKNEY Picton, (Intario.’ Piso's Remedy for Oatarrh Is the Tost, Fasdewt 10 Tee and (henson CATARRH Sold by drugging of seni by mall, So ET. Haseltioe, Warren, Pa EENTE = tery Corals, Belle, Toovher sed Bodies ree. Turritary. WF Sridgman, Pk Weng, 5.7 ome Pemmanship, Arithmetic, TowonovewLy Tavuwy sy MATL. Cirenlars free Bryant's College, 437 Nain 50, buffalo, N.Y, : HAVEN DOUFLE ¢ VLINDER T™ E Pi Mrs naranteed to he Voutk Loe best on ear bh, Sebt ou 20 days’ trial circulars to Haves Pomr & TLawres Co, OPIUM He Fiv to 20 days. No pay till eunred, DR. JLEBTEPHEN GHFIVE OR EUCHRE PARTIES IVE ONY BEmasrian, OG. 7, A, LR LEP. RR, CEXTS, in stam for the ont cards you ever shufMed. To Bs you will receive free by expres ton packs. BY SOWING THE BEST SEEDS. The fast that we sell mare ULUVER, GRASS, LATER Sh ys ee GARDEN SEEDS Bre n NC) in oR CAT WOOD & SONS ym a large Abscess on her hip, the resuit of a’ re, with six openings of which discharged 1 hottie was —- Mrs. [. A. ail time the ne hag — OZ ITo4 0 or Blood them quite and gave The yn rd grew to yel steers, somic we pet Swift's Spex at 5. 5. 8. forced out the poison pix wile, La. It relieves the system promptly, and anc assists » ¥ ANY, Areanta, GA. | SPINS OPOOOIOPOBIBIDESE "888088 aR0EE ke ¥ CUompladats, Liver Tro of Appetite, Meutal Deoress nad Painful CPO 000000 00000 ODS lenses, Sow Fooling; Torpid Water Bras frmplom est its Progen pet perf ors. bi. liver sod y Glaeser hel izapure a fafiure in f their functions by th dines. Persons given to ¢ taking one tabule after epoch a Liood of fx nothing thet ran Be pate. 3 grow $2 18 ons $1.20, 14 grom 7 iN grow 15 cents Sent LY mall portage paid a4 Address THE RIPANS CHENICAL COMPANY, @ P.O Dox OU Sew York ® > * COOP IVOIVOV IVES IVOCLPOO feovosetevsoveovone : ar DECEIVE . : 0.1 St i 3 es and Paling whick a5, ininre the iron. and burn off 1 wa, sing ®un Etove Polish is Brill { tess. Durable, and the crmeromer pave fF 6 L { or glass package with every purchase, Biz Massy Taourson, the most noted physician of Eng. land. says that mere than bail of al! disoases come Crom errors in diet Send for Free Bamplo of Garfield Tea to 319 West 5 4th Eireet, New York City. ELD TEA Over. comes resmite PATENTS Ki, Jus, sued. Coven ae 5! vi § Rd Seas T.W, woop a PLE WET iL weLl